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#4
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![]() Stuart Grant wrote: This will take about half an hour. My economy cruise will be max 22.5" MP or WOT and 2200 RPM. Any advantage to reducing the RPM to 2000 or lower during the long descent? Does it save gas? A 200 rpm reduction will save you 2 gallons per hour in the 470. So you will save 1 gallon. Is it better to reduce MP and leave RPM at 2200? Every two inch reduction in MP also saves you 2 gallons per hour. I know the prop acts like a brake a high RPM-fine pitch. Is low RPM and coarse pitch-more like feathering when you are going downhill? In my 182 I always fly balls to the wall on a cross country. WOT minus a little to tickle the needle and 2450 RPM. When it comes time to descend I do not touch power and just roll in a turn of trim, that gets me 500 fpm down and an extra 15-20 knots. I will reduce MP as necessary to stay at the top of the green, but you don't have to that living out here in the west where 26" is all there is anyways. |
#5
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![]() Is it better to reduce MP and leave RPM at 2200? In my Mooney I like VFR decents at whatever speed I had been cruising. It's my habit in cruise to keep the RPM low, almost always going a little 'oversquare' (MP in inches a bit higher than RPM in hundreds). I don't like speeding up in the decent, and consider the altitude energy in the bank, I spend it on haaving the MP lower. |
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#7
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![]() Is it better to reduce MP and leave RPM at 2200? In my Mooney I like VFR decents at whatever speed I had been cruising. It's my habit in cruise to keep the RPM low, almost always going a little 'oversquare' (MP in inches a bit higher than RPM in hundreds). I don't like speeding up in the decent, and consider the altitude energy in the bank, I spend it on haaving the MP lower. But your giving up all the speed you should have gotten back from the climb. You fly slower in the climb but get it back when you start down. Pulling power back just gives it all up I admit to not running the numbers on that. I figured I chose an airspeed that made sense, save a little fuel on the decent, and even if I come down from 11500 at 500 fpm it's what -- 21 minutes to pattern altitude. At 150 kts + wind, that means I start down about 50 miles out. If I come down at an average of say 165 ktsI'd be starting down maybe 8 miles sooner. Maybe it's as much this as anything -- I mostly do XC under IFR, and like to keep whatever is the filed airspeed. |
#8
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"Robert M. Gary" wrote in message
om... But your giving up all the speed you should have gotten back from the climb. You fly slower in the climb but get it back when you start down. Pulling power back just gives it all up. It's just a matter of what you want to get back. You are right, you are sacrificing speed (energy banked during the climb), but you get in return fuel efficiency (energy banked during the climb). Which is, essentially, what AJW wrote in the first place. You don't lose the energy. You just use it differently, depending on your power setting. Thermodynamically speaking, the lower power setting also produces the more efficient use of the energy, but of course flying isn't always about what's most efficient. ![]() Pete |
#9
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Newps wrote in message ...
Stuart Grant wrote: In my 182 I always fly balls to the wall on a cross country. WOT minus a little to tickle the needle and 2450 RPM. When it comes time to descend I do not touch power and just roll in a turn of trim, that gets me 500 fpm down and an extra 15-20 knots. I pull the throttle back just enough to maintain the same MP as I come down (adjusting every 2000 feet or so). If you forget to roll the throttle back, you'll end up pulling 30" in the pattern. ![]() -Robert |
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